According to news reports, Microsoft is once again preparing to lay off approximately 3% of its global workforce. With an employee strength of around 2,26,000 after the January 2024 layoffs, this means nearly 6,780 individuals may be impacted in the upcoming round.
The job cuts are not expected to be performance-based. Instead, the decision reportedly stems from a desire to simplify organisational structure and streamline management layers. A company spokesperson told CNBC, “We continue to implement organisational changes necessary to best position the company for success in a dynamic marketplace.”
This move follows a similar layoff wave in January 2024, where Microsoft terminated around 2,000 employees, primarily in the gaming and sales divisions. Those cuts were attributed to underperformance and restructuring efforts. Notably, employees affected in January were informed that they would be ineligible to return to the company for at least two years.
Before this, in 2023, Microsoft had already laid off 10,000 employees. With the latest announcement, this marks the third consecutive year the company has undertaken workforce reductions on a significant scale.
What stands out is that these job cuts come despite strong financial performance. For the quarter ending March 31, 2024, Microsoft reported a net profit of $25.8 billion an 18% rise compared to the previous year. This figure comfortably surpassed analyst projections, underpinned by impressive growth in its cloud and AI businesses.
Azure, Microsoft's cloud computing platform, reported a 33% year-over-year revenue increase, surpassing the expected 29.7%, according to Visible Alpha. AI initiatives alone contributed 16 percentage points to Azure’s growth, up from 13 points in the prior quarter.
As Microsoft invests heavily in AI integration and automation across its products and platforms, some observers question whether these job cuts are indirectly driven by the efficiencies brought about by AI. The surge in AI capabilities, while propelling revenue, may also be reducing the need for certain roles, particularly within middle management and support functions.
However, the official statement from Microsoft does not directly attribute the layoffs to AI. Instead, it references a broader effort to adapt to the needs of a “dynamic marketplace,” which could encompass competitive pressures, cost optimisation, and technological transformation.
Microsoft is not alone in recalibrating its workforce. Over the past 2 years, many tech giants have conducted layoffs despite posting strong earnings. The industry appears to be shifting from aggressive expansion to focused consolidation, prioritising agility and profitability over headcount growth.
With AI reshaping how organisations function, companies like Microsoft seem to be navigating the balance between technological advancement and human resource allocation. Whether this trend continues depends on how these internal realignments play out against the backdrop of market dynamics and future innovation.
For now, what’s clear is that even companies at the top of their game are not immune to workforce restructuring, and the driving forces behind these decisions may go beyond performance or profit margins.
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Published on: May 15, 2025, 2:44 PM IST
Team Angel One
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